This configuration is often used in Satellite with Active Subwoofer.
Satellite woofer is passive LP. Tweeter is passive HP.
Subwoofer is active LP and HP to satellite.
Satellite woofer is passive LP. Tweeter is passive HP.
Subwoofer is active LP and HP to satellite.
That's a very dangerous answer.If you are 100% certain that the amp won't pop when switching on or off you don't need the protection cap for an actively driven tweeter.
Any transistor amp can fail to present full DC rail voltage to the load. Of course any amp worth its salt will have a speaker protection system to minimise the risk to drivers, but many don't. For this reason alone any tweeter in an active system ought to have a series protection cap tuned to around 2 or more octaves below the intended high pass corner of the active crossover (or tuned to form part of the intended high pass filter). The presence of such a cap also protects the tweeter from inadvertent connection of say the mid or woofer amp with low frequency output that could fry a fragile tweeter very quickly.
Yes, this means a smaller cap and it will be neatly counted in the response unless the DSP is done 'without measurement' style or similar. It can also reduce amplifier load current.or tuned to form part of the intended high pass filter